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The following
are the descendants of Christopher Lambing
who remain in Bucks county. Many of Christopher
Lambing's family moved into western Pennsylvania
and beyond, but at least two sons remained in Bucks county, Nicholas
Lambing, and now we know for a certainty Michael
Lambing (Lampen),
which we will give evidence of on this page.
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First Nicholas Lambing, who's estate record we have on the index page,
and who appears on the Bond for Christopher
Lambing's (Christopher
Lamping) estate record, and who also (Nicholas
Lambing) appears on the 1820 census, living
in Nockamixion township, Bucks county Pa., the same place Christopher Lambing
settle, and raised his family. It should be noted that there is only
one Nicholas Lamping (Lambing)
in the records for Bucks county and he is clearly from the records mention
above, the son of Christopher Lambing (please
click here to see his birth record), and there is no other Nicholas
Lambing, or Lamping,
or Lampen, or
any other variation of our family name found in any Bucks county records.
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Recently we became aware of the fact that the register from 1803-1927 for
the Haycock Catholic Church, where Christopher
Lambing attended, is on microfilm and is Available
at the Easton Pennsylvania Public Library. Kathy Marcinek and I,
had a researcher named Richard Musselman look at it for us, and he found
the following information.
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Michael legitimate
son of Michael Lamping and Maria,
born 10 April 1831 and baptized 29 March 1835. Sponsors: Bernard Hugh and
Catharina
Rebecca legitimate
dau. of Michael Lamping and Maria,
born 14 July 1828 and baptized 29 March 1835. Sponsors: Bernard O'Connel
and Catharina
Jacobus legitimate
son of Michael Lamping and Maria,
born 14 March 1834 and baptized 29 March 1835. Sponsors: Jacobus O'Connel
and Anna O'Connel
The following family can be clearly identified as the family of a Michael
Lampen, who is said in a Bucks county history
to be the son of a Simon Lampen
and this Michael Lampen is
said to have a brother named Nicholas (there is only one Nicholas
Lampen, Lamping, in Bucks county and he is
beyond a doubt the son of Christopher Lambing). Further research
shows that there is no Simon Lampen
to be found in any Bucks county records (that would include tax records,
church records, land records and census records, there is no Simon
Lampen). This Michael Lampen is clearly
the son of Christopher Lambing, who we find this entry for in the Goshenhoppen
Register
Langbein, Micheal,
of Christopher Langbein
and his wife Anna Maria,
born April 3, 1781, baptized April 22, at Nicholas Carty's house at Haycock
; sponsors, Nicholas Carty and his wife Abertina Kohl.
To confirm this the federal
census of 1850, Doylestown, Bucks county, Pennsylvania, has
Machael Lampin, age 69 years old, occupation
weaver, place of birth Pennsylvania.
Maria Lampen, age 53 years old place
of Birth Germany
If you subtract 69 from 1850, it puts Michael
Lampen date of birth in the year 1781, so the census would also
give evidence that this Micheal Lambing (Lampen)
son of Christopher. It should be noted
the the uniform spelling of last names, is relatively new, it started about
the time of the American Civil War. So the spelling of the name,
Lambing, Lamping, Lomping, or Lampton, Lambion,
and so on, by families members, would not be uncommon, for that time period.
We are now able
to ascertain what happen to Nicholas and his
older brother Michael, who remained in Bucks
county. I am now going to include an article from a Bucks county
history, which will explain there descendants, it should be noted there
are many errors in this article, and we should not be surprise by this
since it was written long after Michael and Nicholas
Lampen had died, and in the time period it was written there was
not the availability of records that we have today, and it is common, that
the early county histories have errors.
Please when reading
this article keep in mind, that there is no record anywhere of a Simon
Lampen in Bucks county Pennsylvania (for this reason I will had the named
Christopher in parenthesis, next to the name
Simon)
From :AUTHOR Davis, W. W. H. (William Watts Hart), 1820-1910.TITLE History
of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, from the discovery of the Delaware to the
present time, by William W. H. Davis.EDITION 2d ed., rev. and enl., with
a genealogical and personal history of Bucks County, prepared under the
editorial supervision of Warren S. Ely and John W. Jordan.PUB/DATE New
York, Lewis Publishing Co., 1905.
GARRET
HARLOW LAMPEN, the distinguished educator, author and lecturer on
American History, Ethnology, Archaeology and kindred subjects, comes of
Bucks county ancestry and is a son of the late Michael
Lampen.
Simon Lampen (Christopher Lambing), so far
as is known to his descendants, was the pioneer ancestor of his family
in America. At the time the Colonists were beginning to arm in defense
of their liberties in 1775, he was a resident of New Hampshire, and of
about the age of twenty-five years. He was descended according to family
tradition from one of two brothers who emigrated from Anhalt, Prussia,
to England, and were granted coats-of-arms by the King of England in 1565
for conspicuous services to the crown. Simon Lampen rendered valuable services
to the patriot cause, assisting In the organization of the militia of New
Hampshire, and participating in a number of battles and skirmishes. In
1778 he removed to Haycock township. Bucks county, Pennsylvania, where
he spent his remaining days. He was survived by two sons, at least
Michael (Lambing) mentioned later in this
narrative, and Nicholas (Lambing, Lamping)
The latter married but left no sons. One daughter removed to Philadelphia,
and the other three, to New Jersey, two of the latter never marrying.
Michael Lampen (Michael Lambing), son of Simon
Lampen (Christopher Lambing), was born in Haycock township, Bucks
county, in 1779. As a boy he was a close student, and he became a man of
scholarly habits, easily ranking as one of the best educated and most widely
read men of his county. He was an unusual Greek and Latin scholar, conversing
as fluently in these languages as he did in German and English. He was
also deeply interested in several of the sciences, and he gave much of
his time to literature. His library of much-thumbed books, nearly all of
them been along intellectual lines, evidenced a man of high intellectual
endowment and deep thought. It was therefore a great surprise to his neighbors
and friends that he chose the humble trade of a weaver as his life work.
He was intensely patriotic and served for a number of years as an officer
in and was prominently identified with the volunteer militia of Bucks county.
Michael Lampen (Lambing) married in 1827 Marie
Anne Byers, a widow, with one son Joseph.
Mrs. Byers had come from Switzerland to Bucks
county in 1817 at the age of fourteen years. Michael
Lampen (Lambing) died in 1863, his wife having died two years before.
Both are buried at the Brick church Tinicum, Bucks county. They were survived
by three children: Rebecca, born July 18.
1828, married Henry Clemens, died May 21,
1832. leaving one son and one daughter, one son having died in infancy
; Michael, born 1831, mentioned later in this
narrative ; John, born March 14, 1834. married
Elizabeth Thomas, died June 14, 1895, leaving
one son and four daughters, one daughter having died in infancy.
Michael Lampen, Jr., son of Michael
(Lambing) and Marie Anne (Byers) Lampen,
was born in Bucks county, April 10, 1831. Inheriting his father's intellectual
abilities and love of study, he worked his way through the lower schools
and then through the old Pennsylvania Medical College, a Philadelphia,
taking a full three yearcourse and graduating with high honors and then
taking a post graduate course of one year at the tam institution The expenses
of his college course were he paid with money earned by farm labor
teaching in the public schools and in surveying a road across the state
of Ohio. He then served throughout the civil war as assistant surgeon
in the Union army being part of the time with the army in South Carolina
but during the greater part of the time being detailed to service in the
Satterlee Military Hospital at Philadelphia, At the close of the war he
settled in Philadelphia and resumed the practice of medicine. He acquired
an enviable reputation as a specialist in diseases of the heart and lungs,
and became one of the greatest obstetricians of his day. In 1858 he married
Rachel Ann Vandegrift, (in the Bensalem township
Presbyterian Church, on September 22, 1858) of Newportville, Bucks
county, a member of one of the oldest Dutch families in the country, an
account of which is given elsewhere in this work, Dr.
Lampen died June 18, 1890 and is survived by his widow and five
children, four others having died in infancy. Those who survive are: Louis
Peale, who is also a distinguished obstetrician, and who married
Elizabeth Horbert ; Howard
Rand. who married Eleanor Thompson Piper,
and is a business man of Philadelphia ; Minnie Roe,
who married Rev. William Allen, Jr., of the
Presbyterian church, and has two sons ; Garret Harlow,
mentioned at length hereinafter, and Maud,
who married Joseph Guild Muirheid, a member
of one of the old families of New Jersey.
Garret
Harlow Lampen, the youngest son of Dr. Michael
and RachelAnn (Vandegrift)Lampen, was born,
in Philadelphia, January 26, 1867. He received his elementary education
at the public schools of his native city, after which he took the Arts
course in the Philadelphia High School, and later took a special course
at Franklin College, Ohio, where he received the degree of Master of Arts.
Devoting his attention to educational work he for several years specialized
in American History and Politics, and made extensive original researches
in American Ethnology and Archaeology, and is considered an authority on
these latter subjects. Professor Lampen has
always aimed for a high plane of work in his chosen profession. Entering
educational work in 1894 he remarked to an associate that he expected to
reach a college presidency "in ten years" ; he realized that goal in one
week less than the time set, being called to the presidency of Bellevue
College, Bellevue, Nebraska. He has been honored with several degrees by
various educational institutions.
Professor Lampen has a national reputation
as an educational and historical writer, and he is also the author of a
number of poems which have received favorable mention and criticism. He
has attained his high rank in the face of almost insurmountable difficulties,
among them the total loss of sight for a time, and four years under the
constant care of an oculist. From the time he left Philadelphia High School
he paid his own way as his father had done before him, never receiving
any outside assistance. In 1895 Professor Lampen,
while superintendent of the Indian School at Philadelphia, was sent on
a special mission by the United States government to the Chippewa Indian
reservation. He served with the Second Regiment Pennsylvania Infantry for
four years (1894-7, inclusive), and joined the Nineteenth Regiment in 1898,
with the hope that it would take him to the front in the Spanish-American
war, the Second Regiment having refused him admission by reason of the
condition of his eyes. He volunteered for service in the war, against Spain
eight times, and he is said to have suggested and planned the trip across
Cuba taken by Lieutenant Row-an of the regulars to connect the armies of
the United States with the Cuban forces. Professor Lampen
has always kept up a lively interest in Bucks county, the birthplace of
his parents, and during the greater part of his life has spent a portion
of each year within her borders, and has always considered himself as belonging
to the county. Religiously he has always been actively associated with
the Presbyterian church. He has never married.
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